Autonomous Greenhouse Challenge: AI for sustainable greenhouse production

The Autonomous Greenhouse Challenge invites international teams to grow crops fully autonomously in WUR’s high-tech greenhouses using artificial intelligence and data. The next edition is set for 2026 – stay tuned for more.
Are you passionate about sustainable greenhouse production? Are you an AI expert? Then join us and become part of our Autonomous Greenhouse Community!
The horticultural sector faces a dual challenge: how to feed a growing world population with healthy food, while using as little energy, water and crop protection products as possible? At the same time, there is a shortage of skilled growers. This makes the step towards autonomous greenhouses both urgent and inevitable.
To accelerate this transition, Wageningen University & Research organises the Autonomous Greenhouse Challenge, which will return for its fifth edition in 2026. In this international competition, multidisciplinary teams develop algorithms that can autonomously manage lighting, heating, CO₂ dosing, irrigation and fertilisation. By combining sensors, camera images, climate models and artificial intelligence, they design crop strategies that rival those of human growers – but with greater efficiency, sustainability and scalability.
Since the first edition in 2018, participating teams have proven this can be done; cucumbers, cherry tomatoes, lettuce and cherry tomatoes were grown autonomously with AI-based control. Higher yields were achieved, water and energy use were reduced and crop quality was improved. In the most recent edition (2024–2025), teams demonstrated that even complete tomato crop cycles can be managed autonomously. There are still many challenges and areas for improvement, but the vision of a fully autonomous greenhouse, producing efficiently around the clock without human intervention, is closer than ever.
The Autonomous Greenhouse Challenge (AGC) is more than a competition between international teams; it is a platform for collaboration. Companies in greenhouse horticulture, AI research groups and technology partners from across the globe join forces to create practical solutions. Participating teams gain access to WUR’s high-tech greenhouse facilities in Bleiswijk, where their algorithms are tested under real-life conditions. Results are shared widely across the sector, ensuring that knowledge and innovations quickly reach practice.
But AGC’s impact goes beyond the sector itself. Autonomous greenhouses offer prospects for food security in regions where skilled growers are scarce and resources limited. They make local production possible, closer to the consumer, even in urban or extreme climate conditions. In this way, the Autonomous Greenhouse Challenge contributes to the global transition towards a sustainable and circular food system.
“The Autonomous Greenhouse Challenge proves that autonomous growing is not just theory – it works in practice. By combining AI with plant expertise, we can boost yield and sustainability while inspiring the sector to think differently”, says Silke Hemming who heads the scientific research team Greenhouse Technology at WUR.
The next edition will take place in 2026. WUR organises the challenge together with international partners and sponsors, including technology companies like Tencent and players across the horticultural chain. Wageningen University & Research contributes unique expertise in plant physiology, greenhouse management, AI applications and data-driven cultivation. Together, we are building the greenhouse of the future.
Are you ready to take on the challenge? More info on the set up of the 2026 edition will be shared soon. If you would like to pre-register, you can do so by contacting Silke Hemming.

Lettuce (3rd edition)
Tomato (2nd edition)
Cucumber (first edition)
Why join the Autonomous Greenhouse Community?

The value
Together, we are shaping the future of greenhouse crop production. Join us in this exciting venture!
- Discover leading expertise in greenhouse horticulture
- Access unique facilities for real-world experiments
- Collaborate with international top teams
- Innovate at the crossroads of AI and plant science
Contact us
Ready to participate or want to know more? Contact our expert.
dr. S (Silke) Hemming
Head of the research team Greenhouse Technology
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